“I Heard the Voice. I Felt the Presence”: Prayer, Health and Implications for Clinical Practice

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Other Version

External File or Record

Can’t use the file because of accessibility barriers? Contact us

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Research concerning the relation between physical health and prayer typically employs an outcome oriented paradigm and results are inconsistent. This is not surprising since prayer per se is not governed by physiological principles. More revealing and logically compelling, but more rare, is literature examining health and prayer from the perspective of the participants. The present study examines the health–prayer experience of 104 Christians in the United States. Data were collected through recorded video interviews and analyzed by means of content analysis. Results show that prayer is used as a context nuanced spiritual tool for: dealing with physical suffering (spiritual-religious coping); sustaining hope and spirituality via a sacred dimension; personal empowerment; self-transcendence. These findings demonstrate that practitioners primarily engage prayer at a spiritual rather than a physical level, underscoring the limitations of a biomedical or “Complementary and Alternative Medicine” perspective that conceptualizes prayer as a mechanism for intentionally improving physical health. In clinical practice, regarding the medical, psychotherapeutic, or pastoral, the challenge is to understand prayer through the framework of the practitioner, in order to affirm its potential in healthcare processes.

Series and Number:

EducationalLevel:

Is Based On:

Target Name:

Teaches:

Table of Contents

Description

Citation

Esperandio, Mary, and Kevin Ladd. “‘I Heard the Voice. I Felt the Presence’: Prayer, Health and Implications for Clinical Practice.” Religions, vol. 6, June 2015, pp. 670–85, doi:10.3390/rel6020670.

Journal

Rights

This work may be protected by copyright unless otherwise stated.